Albuquerque police face hundreds of protesters
By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN
Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) - A day
after a protest over Albuquerque police shootings devolved into violence, the
city's new police chief on Monday commended officers for showing restraint and
said he is about to unveil reforms that include changes to the embattled
department's recruiting process.
Richard Berry said one officer
was injured, rocks were thrown and at one point protesters trapped police in a
vehicle and tried to break the windows, the Albuquerque Journal reported
(http://bit.ly/1i6XLC3 ). An Associated Press reporter saw gas canisters being
thrown outside police headquarters and Albuquerque police and Bernalillo County
sheriff's deputies charging at the protesters late Sunday, which mostly
dispersed the crowds.
Berry didn't know of any
arrests, and multiple messages left for the police department weren't
immediately returned. Video by KRQE-TV shows people being led away in zip-tie
restraints, but it's unclear if those people were arrested of if any protesters
were injured.
"We respected their rights
to protest obviously," Berry said, "but what it appears we have at
this time is individuals who weren't connected necessarily with the original
protest . they've taken it far beyond a normal protest."
Protesters took to the streets
in the early afternoon and stayed out late Sunday after authorities declared an
unlawful assembly. People are angry over Albuquerque police's involvement in 37
shootings, 23 of them fatal since 2010. Critics say that's far too many for a
department serving a city of about 555,000.
The protesters repeatedly
marched the 2 miles from downtown Albuquerque to the University of New Mexico,
holding signs protesting recent police shootings and often snarling traffic.
Motorists honked, and supporters took photos with smartphones. Activists called
on various city officials to resign, yelling late Sunday for the police chief
to resign.
Justin Elder, 24, followed the
protest as a passenger in a car and held a sign that read, "APD: Dressed
To Kill."
"That's what this police
force is about," Elder said.
Albuquerque police in riot gear
and New Mexico State Police followed the marchers, and protesters were seen
shouting epithets at officers. At one point, a protester climbed a tall street
sign on the city's historic Route 66 and unsuccessfully attempted to bring it
down.
A different protester,
Alexander Siderits, 23, said he was participating because he was "fed
up" with how police treat citizens. "It has reached a boiling
point," he said, "and people just can't take it anymore."
The U.S. Justice Department has
been investigating the department for more than a year, looking into complaints
of civil rights violations and allegations of excessive use of force.
The gathering came days after a
YouTube video emerged threatening retaliation for a recent deadly police
shooting.
The video, which bore the logo
of the computer hacking collective Anonymous, warned of a cyberattack on city
websites and called for the protest march. Albuquerque police said their site
had been breached early Sunday afternoon, but it was visible late in the
afternoon after being offline for hours.
Earlier Sunday, police
spokesman Simon Drobik confirmed the disruption was due to a cyberattack and
said investigators had not uncovered the source of the hack.
In the shooting on March 16
that led to the YouTube posting Tuesday, a homeless man was killed in the
foothills of the Sandia Mountains on the east side of Albuquerque. The shooting
was captured on video and followed a long standoff. The FBI has opened an
investigation into the shooting.
Last week, Albuquerque police
fatally shot a man at a public housing complex. Authorities said he shot at
officers before they returned fire.